Anonymous wrote:I think people erroneously focus on the outliers in terms of HHI for area privates. A good portion of families still draw from the professional cadre of DC.
Don't have stats, but would venture a guess that 300k is in fact the median at many of the privates.
We are $280k HHI with one kid in kindergarten and feel fairly average at our elite private (we are early 30s in early mid career with a fair amount of expected income growth in our fields)
Anonymous wrote:Just wanted to address "you'll be the poor kid" if you do private and you make $300k/yr. Um, no. Really and truly, no. Our HHI is half that, kid in a great private because the local public school is crap, and we feel normal. Yes, many people have more money than we do, but some have less and lots have about the same. It isn't an issue.
Anonymous wrote:Hi OP,
We have an analogous situation (less HHI but 1 kid in private not two). We are doing it but only for middle school and possibly HS. We live pretty frugally (old cars and such), watch our standing expenses and buy second-hand, etc. We could do more but DH is a bit more of a spender than me and I don't want to argue over every penny.
Why don't you NOW pretend you have one or two kids in private school, and pay yourself what tuition would be into a separate account. See what's it's like to live like that. You might be able to do it. Plus you could get financial aid with the second child enrolling, possibly. If you can't bear the expense you'll know and you'll have a nice nest egg for the move. Good luck!
Anonymous wrote:Of course you can. This is an oversimplification, but it just means your HHI would be $240k. Are people really thinking that's not still a perfectly reasonable amount to live comfortably on? Let's not forget: they have a 15 year mortgage. House will be paid off when kids are in college. Also sounds like they will have 2 pensions. And, at $240k, they can still find a way to max out their retirement savings.
Of course, $60k a year for 2 kids for all those years is a ton of money. You sure you can't put that towards a house in a better school district? Seems like you could get something pretty nice for less money, and it's an investment so you get something back when you sell.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Of course you can. This is an oversimplification, but it just means your HHI would be $240k. Are people really thinking that's not still a perfectly reasonable amount to live comfortably on? Let's not forget: they have a 15 year mortgage. House will be paid off when kids are in college. Also sounds like they will have 2 pensions. And, at $240k, they can still find a way to max out their retirement savings.
Of course, $60k a year for 2 kids for all those years is a ton of money. You sure you can't put that towards a house in a better school district? Seems like you could get something pretty nice for less money, and it's an investment so you get something back when you sell.
It does not mean that their HHI would be 240k because the 60k comes out of post tax money...,
I do not agree that being the poor kid in private school would be constructive. I went to a top tier private school on a full scholarship and it was very difficult for me socially. I couldnt even do basic things like go out with my friends to the mall because that usually involved spending boatloads of money that I didnt have. I also got left out of travel activities...summers in nantucket and maine, etc. I was able to connect with a few people but for the most part felt like I was on the outside looking in.
Anonymous wrote:Of course you can. This is an oversimplification, but it just means your HHI would be $240k. Are people really thinking that's not still a perfectly reasonable amount to live comfortably on? Let's not forget: they have a 15 year mortgage. House will be paid off when kids are in college. Also sounds like they will have 2 pensions. And, at $240k, they can still find a way to max out their retirement savings.
Of course, $60k a year for 2 kids for all those years is a ton of money. You sure you can't put that towards a house in a better school district? Seems like you could get something pretty nice for less money, and it's an investment so you get something back when you sell.
Anonymous wrote:Hi OP,
We have an analogous situation (less HHI but 1 kid in private not two). We are doing it but only for middle school and possibly HS. We live pretty frugally (old cars and such), watch our standing expenses and buy second-hand, etc. We could do more but DH is a bit more of a spender than me and I don't want to argue over every penny.
Why don't you NOW pretend you have one or two kids in private school, and pay yourself what tuition would be into a separate account. See what's it's like to live like that. You might be able to do it. Plus you could get financial aid with the second child enrolling, possibly. If you can't bear the expense you'll know and you'll have a nice nest egg for the move. Good luck!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good gravy, there are scads of pricey private schools in the Washington area. If so many people think $300k is not sufficient HHI to have the kids go to these schools, how much is needed? $500k HHI? $1 million?
We make over $400K and would have to seriously change our standard of living to spend an additional $5K a month on private school. We save a bit more than that each month, but who wants to live that close to the line?
Cry me a river. I am so grateful I had parents who made my schooling their priority.